--- In [email protected], off_world_beings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Here is your Quagmire MDIXON. Explain to me again, how are you 
> getting out of Iraq?
> 
> OffWorld

You guy's just don't get it do you. We don't want to get out of Iraq.
Wake up!
We are sending Billions and Billions of dollars there;
Where do you suppose it's all going?
Where do you suppose the 500 billion dollar budget for the military 
this year is going.
Where do you suppose the 3-4 dollar gasoline profits are going.
What has it gotten us to invade a soveriegn nation, that had nothing 
to do with the events of 9/11.
What does it mean, that Donald Rumsfeld, is pictured shaking Saddams 
hand in the eighties.
The military/industrial complex, that President Eisenhower warned of, 
now runs things in this country.
It happened gradually, but now it is the Corporation, and the 
military, who runs things in this country, and is multi-national at 
this point.
We no longer vote for President. Any President who would pull out of 
Iraq, or cut the miltitary budget, from recent past history, would be 
put out of office, one way or the other.
The Court voted Bush into office.
Get a grip...
They don't want to get out of Iraq, ever.
They want an American style democracy there.
They want a base there forever.
Like the Phillipines, or like all of the other places we have taken 
over.
Wake up and smell the coffee.
The real black hole, is the Godless corporations, the military 
industry, and the drug dealing which this military/industrial 
complex, is...
It's god is power, money, and the power over life and death.
Sort of sound like the German body politic of the thirties, and early 
forties, starting with the invasion of Poland, doesn't it?
> 
> 
> --- In [email protected], Robert Gimbel <babajii_99@> 
> wrote:
> >
> >   Nearly 6,000 civilians were slain across  Iraq in May and June, 
> a spike in deaths that coincided with rising sectarian attacks 
> across the country, the United Nations said Tuesday. 
> >   The report from the U.N. Assistance Mission in Iraq describes a 
> wave of lawlessness and crime, including assassinations, bombings, 
> kidnappings, torture and intimidation.
> >   Hundreds of teachers, judges, religious leaders and doctors 
have 
> been targeted for death, and thousands of people have fled, the 
> report said. Evidence suggests militants also have begun to target 
> homosexuals, it said.
> >   "While welcoming recent positive steps by the government to 
> promote national reconciliation, the report raises alarm at the 
> growing number of casualties among the civilian population killed 
or 
> wounded during indiscriminate or targeted attacks by terrorists or 
> insurgents," the U.N. said in a note accompanying the report.
> >   In the last two days alone, more than 120 people were killed in 
> violence in Iraq. In the worst attacks, fifty-three perished in a 
> suicide bombing Tuesday in Kufa, and 50 were slain Monday in a 
> market in Mahmoudiya.
> >   According to the report, 2,669 civilians were killed in May and 
> 3,149 were killed in June. Those numbers combined two counts: from 
> the Ministry of Health, which records deaths reported by hospitals; 
> and the Medico-Legal Institute in Baghdad, which tallies the 
> unidentified bodies it receives.
> >   The report charts a month-by-month increase in the number of 
> civilians killed, from 710 in January to 1,129 in April. In the 
> first six months of the year, it said 14,338 people had been killed.
> >   The report's figures were higher than some other counts, but 
> even the U.N. said many killings go unreported.
> >   According to an Associated Press tally based on its daily 
> reporting, at least 1,511 civilians were killed, in May and June, 
> with at least an additional 289 police and security forces killed.
> >   The AP tally showed that from January through June 2006, at 
> least 4,191 civilians were killed. The minimum number of police and 
> security forces casualties in that period was at least 805 killed. 
> The AP figures do not include insurgents.
> >   It was unclear whether the tally from the Medico-Legal 
Institute 
> included only those who were killed as a result of violence.
> >   The spike in casualties comes despite the formation of a unity 
> government, which took power on May 20. U.S. officials had hoped it 
> would make good on promises to disband Shiite militants and bring 
> Sunni insurgents into the fold.
> >   Yet, as the report said, parts of Iraq have seen "collusion 
> between criminal gangs, militias and sectarian 'hit groups,' 
alleged 
> death squads, vigilante groups and religious extremists."
> >   It also details the rise in kidnappings, particularly of large 
> groups of people. On May 17, for example, the report said 15 Tae 
> Kwon Do athletes were kidnapped in western Iraq.
> >   "There is no news regarding their whereabouts," the report said.
> >   Women report that their rights have been rolled back by 
> extremist Muslim groups — both Shiite and Sunni. 
> >   While under Saddam Hussein's largely secular regime, women 
faced 
> few social restrictions, they say they are now barred from going to 
> market alone, wearing pants or driving cars.
> >   And children are frequently victims, perishing in large crowds 
> or sometimes even targeted themselves, the report said.
> >   "Violence, corruption, inefficiency of state organs to exert 
> control over security, establish the rule of law and protect 
> individual and collective rights all lead to inability of both the 
> state and the family to meet the needs of children," it said.   The 
> government still has not pursued many allegations of torture and 
> other inhumane treatment in prisons and detention centers, the U.N. 
> said.
> >     By NICK WADHAMS, Associated Press Writer  
> >   
> > 
> >   UNITED NATIONS - 
> > 
> > 
> >             
> > ---------------------------------
> > Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs.Try it free.
> >
>







------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
See what's inside the new Yahoo! Groups email.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/2pRQfA/bOaOAA/yQLSAA/UlWolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

To subscribe, send a message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Or go to: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
and click 'Join This Group!' 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to